U.S. Department of LaborCareer Pathway Institute
Certificates that CountApril 26, 2011
What does it look like here? How did we get here? (2004-
2011) What’s the story underneath the
story? What’s a Career Pathway? What’s a Career Pathway
Certificate? Where are we headed in the
future & what’s new?
17 locally-controlled community colleges that offer both lower division transfer & CTE
ABE/GED/ESL offered by the community colleges.
Community Colleges & WIA in same agency: CCWD
Colleges collaborate and work together on “systems” issues: Presidents, Instructional Deans, Student Services Deans, CTE Deans, Institutional Researchers, Pathways meet quarterly
Bottoms-up: 3 community colleges involved in developing career pathways
Tops-down: Governor’s commitment; NGA Pathways to Advancement Academy
Same Governor 8 years; providing seed funding; new Governor supportive
President’s Resolution 2006, 2008, 2010 Going to scale: 5 colleges, then 11, then
17 Champions at multiple levels &
organizations
Academies: bringing teams together from colleges to learn and plan together (2005, 2007, 2008); ongoing training & technical assistance
Career Pathways for all students Career Pathway Roadmaps & WebTool Open Source Agreement More than 350 roadmaps across 17 colleges Available through 17 CC websites; Oregon
Labor Market Information System (OLMIS) & statewide careers website www.qualityinfo.org & www.MyPathCareers.org/cp
Oregon Pathways Alliance: Collaboration-- core value
Migrating ideas and promising practices Capacity-building: leadership & cross-
organizational learning (Academy model) Building trust & listening Systems thinking & diffusion of innovation Systems not “silos”: habit of mind College Coordinators: Boundary
spanners--- horizontal & vertical; leveraging resources
Focus on students & relationship-building
Implementing the Model: Developmental process--- capacity-building & outcomes
Building on each college’s strengths “Not too loose, not too tight” State role: Facilitator, organizer Provide incentive for systems change Balance the “carrot” & the “stick” Doing a lot with little: “patchwork quilt
funding”; leveraging resources Link career, labor market, & community
colleges & workforce websites
To increase the number of Oregonians with certificates, credentials, and degrees.
To ease student transitions across the education continuum from high school to community college; from ABS to credit postsecondary; from community college to university and employment.
A career pathway is a series of connected education and training programs and student support services that enable individuals to secure a job or advance in a demand industry or occupation. Career Pathways focus on easing and facilitating student transition from:
High school to community college Pre-college (ABS) to credit postsecondary From community college to university or
employment.
New Certificate approved by SBE 7/1/2007 Wholly-contained in A.A.S. degrees only (CTE) “Chunking” the curriculum—Dr. Kate Dins/PCC 12-44 credits “Stackable” certificate Competencies tied to a job in a demand
occupation in local labor market (not all AAS degrees are “chunked” depends on labor market)
Approved by Employer Advisory Committee Milestone or momentum point to a degree
177 certificates across 17 colleges 350 completers 2008-09; 1200+ in 09-
10 Biennium goal is 2345 by June 2011 FUTURE:
Increase number of completersIncrease labor market payoff; increased
employer outreach & involvementConduct Career Pathway Certificate research
study
Oregon Pathways for Adult Basic Skills (OPABS): five courses developed and piloted
Goal: increase number of ABS students transitioning to credit postsecondary/CTE
VESL program courses leading to a Career Pathway Certificate at metro colleges & slowly expanding to other colleges
Gates ABE to Credentials Design Team
Ranch Animal Technician Medical Coder Sustainable Energy Technician Manufacturing Technician HVAC Installer Web Assistant Welder Helper Wine Marketing Assistant Accounting Clerk
Streamlined program approval process: AAS degree is already approved. Approx. 45-60 days
Submit Roadmap. Elements include: occupation, competencies, courses, labor market occupational data including wages and job progression, articulation with 4-year programs; industry credentials; employers involved in developing certificate.
Federal and state financial aid is not designed for short-term Certificate programs and does not fund most Career Pathway, Less Than One Year (LTOY), and other stand-alone 12-44 credit Certificate Programs. Career Pathway, LTOY, and other stand-alone Certificates that are 36-44 credits and three terms in length can be submitted on a college’s Program Participation Agreement (PPA) and considered for federal and state financial aid.
While many students are not entirely certain of their major goal when they enter community college and apply for financial aid, declaring an associate degree as their major goal allows students the most options to attain a certificate or degree. Students who declare a course of study as an Associate Degree can obtain a Career Pathway Certificate, LTOY, or other stand-alone Certificate as they complete the required coursework toward attaining their degree goal. Career Pathway Certificates & Less Than One Year Certificates are “momentum points” in student progression toward an associate degree.
Shifting from 1:1 correlation with roadmaps (1 occupation at 1 community college to 1:17 + apprecticeship programs.
Green LMI Grant Five occupations: solar, wind, HVAC,
construction/carpentry, advanced manufacturing
www.oregongreenpathways.org (login: green password: guest) Live: June 1
Mimi Maduro
Pathways Initiative Statewide Director
Oregon Department of Community Colleges & Workforce Development
www.oregonpathways.org
http://oregon.ctepathways.org
www.MyPathCareers.org/cp
www.oregongreenpathways.org
(login: green, password: guest)